best-before dates on their favourite foods.And now, there is a call on the government to reevaluate whether best-before dates on foods are even necessary.John Bailey, the CEO of the Regina Food Bank, said best-before dates are often intertwined with expiry dates, but the two are very different.“The idea of a best-before date is about peak freshness and quality control,” Bailey explained. “(With) expiry dates, once it is surpassed, you start to run into potential issues with contamination and the food not being healthy.Bailey said with best-before dates, depending on the food, there is a large grace period when foods are actually okay to eat.“Anywhere from a few weeks to several months to even a year or so beyond is when you can still sort of safely … enjoy the food that is past the best-before date.”For items such as dairy, produce and meat, however, the food can quickly go downhill after the best-before date.
Bailey said the safest way to check is to smell the food rather than taste-testing it.Second Harvest, a Food Rescue Charity in Canada, is raising the alarm on the misconception between best-before dates and expiry dates.They say the issue is leading to unnecessary food waste and food insecurity. And now, they are calling on the federal government to address it.“People are throwing food away and people are struggling to put food on their tables, but people are still throwing it away because they think it’s a food safety issue and it’s simply not,” Lori Nikkel, Second Harvest CEO said when discussing best-before dates.Nikkel said the issue isn’t only happening at a household level, but at all levels of the production train.“It’s across the supply chain and it is trailer loads of food being dumped because of an
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